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JAMA Netw Open . Awake Prone Positioning in Patients With COVID-19 Respiratory Failure: A Randomized Clinical Trial

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  • JAMA Netw Open . Awake Prone Positioning in Patients With COVID-19 Respiratory Failure: A Randomized Clinical Trial

    JAMA Netw Open


    . 2025 Dec 1;8(12):e2548201.
    doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.48201. Awake Prone Positioning in Patients With COVID-19 Respiratory Failure: A Randomized Clinical Trial

    Anatole Harrois 1 , Romain Jouffroy 2 3 , Soufia Ayed 4 , Cédric Bruel 5 , Laurent Savale 6 7 , Mathilde Devaux 8 , Mylène Maillet 9 , Charles Cerf 10 , Clément Lejealle 11 12 , Carolina Gomez Moreno 13 , Albrice Levrat 14 , Romain Gueneau 15 , Stéphane Jouveshomme 16 , Pierre Bonnin 17 , Stéphane De Rudnicki 18 , Charles Damoisel 19 , Thomas Gille 20 21 , Hugues Cordel 22 23 , Simon Meslin 24 , Victor Bocquillon 25 , Nicolas Noël 26 , Antoine Vieillard-Baron 2 , Jean-Louis Teboul 4 , Marc Tran 5 , Marie Werner 1 , Jérémie Pichon 6 7 , Ali Janbain 27 , Eric Vicaut 27 , Jacques Duranteau 1 ; PROVID Study Group



    Collaborators, AffiliationsAbstract

    Importance: Awake prone positioning (APP) has shown inconstant associations with improved clinical outcomes in nonintubated patients with COVID-19 developing severe pneumonia.
    Objective: To evaluate the effects of APP on the need for intubation or incidence of death among patients with COVID-19-related hypoxemic respiratory failure.
    Design, setting, and participants: This randomized clinical trial was conducted at 20 hospitals in France and 1 hospital in Mexico between July 2020 and August 2021. The study included patients from wards and intensive care units. Adult patients (18 years or older) who were not intubated and required at least 3 L/min of oxygen flow due to COVID-19 infection were included and randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to either APP or standard care. Intention-to-treat statistical analysis was performed from September to December 2024.
    Intervention: Patients randomly assigned to the APP group were offered the intervention lasting at least 6 hours a day. Patients randomly assigned to standard care had no positioning constraint, including no contraindication to spontaneous APP.
    Main outcomes and measures: The primary outcome was a composite criterion of intubation and/or death in the first 28 days of randomization. Prespecified secondary outcomes at 28 days of enrollment were days alive outside the intensive care unit (ICU), days alive outside the hospital, proportion of patients admitted to ICU (for patients not in ICU at baseline), and days alive and free from mechanical ventilation. A bayesian approach was used to provide insights into the complete distribution of the effect estimates.
    Results: A total of 445 patients were included in the final analysis (mean [SD] age, 60 [11] years; 329 males [74%]; median [IQR] SpO2 to FIO2 [peripheral oxygen saturation to fraction of inspired oxygen] ratio, 150 [114-194] and 155 [109-221] in the standard care and APP groups, respectively). With a noninformative prior distribution, the posterior probability that APP decreased intubation and/or death compared with standard care was 93.8% (mean odds ratio [OR], 0.74; 95% credible interval [CrI], 0.48-1.09). For secondary outcomes, between the APP and standard care groups, the mean difference in the number of days alive and free from mechanical ventilation was 0.33 (95% CrI, -1.37 to 2.03) days; in the number of days alive outside the ICU was 1.28 (95% CrI, -0.78 to 3.34) days; and in the number of days alive outside the hospital was 1.55 (95% CrI, -0.22 to 3.32) days.
    Conclusions and relevance: In this randomized clinical trial of nonintubated patients with COVID-19 and hypoxemic respiratory failure, daily APP of 6 hours showed a high probability of reduced endotracheal intubation and/or death over a wide range of prior distributions. These results support APP's use in patients with hypoxemic pneumonia due to COVID-19 infection.
    Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04366856.


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